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Showing posts with label Stephanie Clifford. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stephanie Clifford. Show all posts

Thursday, July 12, 2018

She Is Nothing More Than A Porn Queen!


Stormy Daniels arrested in Ohio


Porn actress Stormy Daniels was arrested at an Ohio strip club on Wednesday and is accused of inappropriate groping of some of the patrons’ breasts and allowing others to touch hers, a violation of state law.
Daniels, whose legal name is Stephanie Clifford, has been released on bond. The charging documents allege she performed the same act with several officers who approached the stage and forced one officer’s head into her bare chest and fondled another officers breasts.
Daniels is set to be arraigned Friday on three misdemeanor counts of touching a patron at a “sexually oriented” business in violation of an Ohio strip club law.
Daniels’s lawyer, Michael Avenatti, says she will plead not guilty to all counts. Some patrons touched her in a “non-sexual” way, her lawyer, Michael Avenatti, told The Associated Press.
An Ohio law known as the Community Defense Act prohibits anyone who isn’t a family member to touch a nude or semi-nude dancer. Daniels is expected to face three misdemeanor charges. She was released on bail before 6 a.m. Thursday.
“Police officers at the club said that while dancing topless, Ms. Clifford pressed patrons’ faces into her chest and fondled the breasts of some women in the audience, according to an affidavit filed by the police,” The New York Times reported. “She performed similar acts on three officers, and grabbed one by the buttocks, the affidavit said.”
“This was a complete set up,” Avenatti said. “It’s absurd that law enforcement resources are being spent to conduct a sting operation related to customers touching performers in a strip club in a non-sexual manner.”
He also posted Daniels’ statement on Twitter early Thursday saying she apologized to her fans in Columbus, but she would not perform her previously scheduled Thursday night show.
A Columbus police spokeswoman didn’t immediately respond to a message seeking comment.
Daniels has been in headlines for the past year, using an unverified story that she had relationsx with President Donald Trump in 2006. Trump has denied the accusation.
She’s suing Trump and his former longtime personal attorney, Michael Cohen, and seeking to invalidate a nondisclosure agreement that she signed days before the 2016 presidential election.
The Associated Press contributed to this article

Monday, May 14, 2018

This Case Is Starting To Stink To High Heaven!

Avenatti Docs Leak: Got $8 Million Out of Thin Air When Stormy Arrived

Avenatti Docs Leak: Got $8 Million Out of Thin Air When Stormy Arrived
 
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Lawyer and/or media gadabout Michael Avenatti has thus far provided a great deal of the comic relief in l’affaire Stormy Daniels, but there are a surprising number of serious questions about him that remain unanswered.
For instance, who’s paying him? Daniels has confirmed that she isn’t footing the bill, and from the looks of things, Avenatti’s round-the-clock availability seems to indicate that he’s not doing a whole lot of work for other clients.
Also, is the person paying Avenatti associated in any way with the DNC or outside political groups? Is he protecting Daniels from penalties she might incur? And, perhaps most crucially, how much is he being paid?
In spite of the fact that Avenatti’s appearances on cable news seem more frequent than takeoffs at LaGuardia, we don’t have any answers to these questions — nor indeed does anyone on CNN or MSNBC feel particularly inclined to ask them. They just assume that it’s none of their business and move along their merry way.
For his part, Avenatti has said that his legal fees are either being paid by Daniels or crowdfunding from CrowdJustice, an online platform where you can give small donations to certain legal causes.
“Despite the fact that I have answered this repeatedly, many refuse to accept the answer,” Avenatti wrote in a statement posted to the Dropbox account of his law firm Avenatti & Associates.
“Once again (for at least the 20th time) — ALL fees and expenses of this case have either been funded by our client, Ms. Stephanie Clifford (Stormy Daniels), or by donations from our crowdjustice.com page. Please read that if you are unclear. Read it again if need be. Keep reading it until you get it.”
As humorously Biff Tanner-like as that terse statement may be, there are several problems with it. First, while he’s busy banging journalists’ heads against the wall so that they’ll read what he had to say, he probably should instruct his own client to read it, since her own statements in the matter directly contradict this. And second, it doesn’t explain why he seems to have come into $8 million as the  Daniels case began to explode earlier this year.

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Eight million, you say? Apparently so — at least if a bit of sleuthing by notable trial lawyer Robert Barnes is to be believed.
Barnes looked up some tax information on Avenatti’s law firm and found he hadn’t paid any taxes for the years 2014, 2015 and 2016, even though filings in a bankruptcy court said that during that period the firm earned a whopping $30 million.
“In January 2018, (Michael Avenatti) got an unidentified source of income that allowed him to pay $4.85M to his law firm employees he defrauded, close to $2M in back taxes for payroll taxes on his law firm, and near another $1M to other creditors,” Barnes tweeted.
“Same time as: new client #StormyDaniels.”
RELATED: Romney Says Trump-Supporting Pastor Is Bigot, but Bible Disagrees
While Barnes’ statements are still unconfirmed, this is a fairly well-known (if notably pro-Trump) legal source. He’d also be in a world of trouble should those statements turn out to be untrue, since I assume Avenatti would have no problem suing him for libel and cleaning out his coffers were this untrue.
And, as it turns out, he provided legal papers that more or less proved this.
As you can see, Avenatti only declared $412,000 in assets to his name in December of 2017. He also declared more than $19.4 million in liabilities.
But in court documents filed less than a month later, Avenatti discloses that came into $4.85 million to settle a fraud lawsuit brought by members of law firm that he allegedly defrauded, nearly $2 million in back payroll taxes on his law firm and close to $1 million for his other creditors.
That adds up to nearly $8 million that he apparently didn’t have in December. So, either he lied to the court when listing his assets, he managed to scrounge up that money in the cushions of his sofa, or he’s being paid $8 million for work.
I know crowdfunding can be effective and some porn stars probably make a fair bit of change. They don’t make enough to subsidize a lawyer to the point where that the attorney can enter into a Eugene Landy/Brian Wilson-esque relationship with them and seemingly do no work for other clients. I’m sorry, that’s not quite how that works — especially when $8 million dollars drops in your lap during the month that it just happens you took on Daniels as a client.
This isn’t a minor question, either. Writing in The Hill last week, Mark Penn suggested that Avenatti’s report on money going to Michael Cohen “also raises the question of where and how did he get this detailed financial information because he didn’t find it on Google.”
“This is the kind of information that would have been known only by the Treasury Department, his banks or by prosecutors, raising some serious questions about what kind of operation Avenatti is running,” Penn wrote. “He can’t be both an attorney and then participate as an officer of the court in trafficking illegally obtained information.”
Penn also noted that “Avenatti has been given a free, unfettered media perch on TV to spread his stuff without the networks forcing him to meet any disclosure requirements, saying that he is Daniels’s attorney when someone else entirely is paying for this operation is not true disclosure that allows the viewer to evaluate the source and potential conflicts.
“He is now being given deference as though he is a journalist interested in protecting unverified sources while he makes headline-grabbing pronouncements,” Penn added. “Lawyers need to disclose the source of their evidence.”
As to whether or not that $8 million was involved with his work for Daniels, it seems awfully felicitous that money just happened to drop into Avenatti’s lap almost simultaneously with his taking the case. There’s no definitive link yet, but given that Avenatti’s crowdfunding story beggars belief, this certainly sounds a lot more plausible.
But, hey, there’s one way that Avenatti could prove all of us wrong: Open up all of us books on the Daniels case. Show us his crowdfunding statements. Get CrowdJustice to verify them. He doesn’t seem particularly shy about disclosing almost anything else about this case.
If he really and truly didn’t get any money from outside sources, making all of that information transparent would make anyone who questioned this in the first place look stupid.
For whatever reason, I don’t think I’m going to be seeing any of that anytime soon.
What do you think? 

Friday, May 4, 2018

CNN Is Becomiing The Porn Star's Advertising Unit

CNN Reporter Disrupts White House Prayer Event with Stormy Daniels Segment

CNN Reporter Disrupts White House Prayer Event With Stormy Daniels Segment
 
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During a White House event Thursday commemorating the National Day of Prayer, CNN went live to a reporter who proceeded to discuss the latest developments regarding payments received by adult film star Stormy Daniels from President Donald Trump’s attorney.
“CNN’s Kaitlan Collins is at the White House where the president is about to take part in an event to mark the National Day of Prayer,” anchor Kate Bolduan said at the start of the segment. “Kaitlan, there’s a lot to pray about today. What are you hearing from the White House?”
The Washington Examiner reported Collins spoke so loudly that some members of the audience turned around to see the source of the noise.
Andrew Beatty, a White House reporter for AFP, tweeted that the CNN reporter was disruptive.
“Slightly awkward moment in the Rose Garden as National Day of Prayer reception guests await the president,” he wrote. “All quiet except for the sound a CNN reporter doing piece to camera about Stormy Daniels. Some giggles some questioning glances.”
Collins tweeted after the event that a White House guest found her reporting “pitiful and disgusting.”
As was true of her live shot, the reporter’s tweet glossed over the fact that Trump did not admit to reimbursing his personal attorney Michael Cohen $130,000 for his payment to Daniels, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford. Rather, Trump indicated Cohen was repaid through the $35,000 monthly retainer fee he received as the then-businessman/reality television star’s lawyer.

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He tweeted that non-disclosure agreements, like the one Cohen entered into with Clifford on Trump’s behalf, are “very common among celebrities and people of wealth” and said the purpose was “to stop the false and extortionist accusations by her about an affair” just weeks before the November 2016 election.
Collins predicted that reporters would shout out questions at Trump about the Daniel’s payment at some point during Trump’s appearance at the prayer event, which in fact happened.
Just as Trump was leaving, an unidentified reporter shouted, “What about Stormy Daniels?” which prompted a “shame on you” from an attendee, according to The Daily Caller’s Saagar Enjeti.
NewsBusters reported that CNN has dedicated an inordinate amount of coverage to the Daniels controversy, including having the porn star’s attorney Michael Avenatti on the network nearly 60 times.
RELATED: CNN Compares Trump Phone Usage to 15-Year-Old Child
“In less than two months (from March 7 to April 30), Avenatti has been a guest on CNN a total of 59 times — an average of more than once per day,” according to the media watchdog group.
In March, the MRC had already concluded that “CNN has a porn problem.”
The MRC reported at that time, “CNN took it to another level … devoting roughly 41 minutes to (Daniels’) … performance at a Florida strip club.”
What do you think?